Researchers at US college North Carolina State University claim to have worked out how to allow Wi-Fi hotspots to fling up to 700 per cent more data back and forth, freeing large-scale Wi-Fi networks from the congestion that keeps users waiting for web pages to load and, in worst cases, to think they’ve been disconnected.

And the technique’s effectiveness in direct proportion to the number of clients connected to the base-station.

Called WiFox, the NCSU system is essentially an algorithm that monitors the volume of traffic an access point is handling. If the access point is building up a backlog of data to send to clients, WiFox tells it to prioritise the transmission of that data over dealing with new requests. The more data in the queue, the more a given access point is given the go-ahead to clear it.

The down-to-Earth upshot, say the boffins, is that data flows through the system more efficiently, allowing more data to be sent. In practical terms, that means delivering requested web pages and the content they contain much more quickly than before.

The NCSU team trialled WiFox on their own wireless network, capable to supporting up to 45 users. With few users connected, the access points can handle the traffic, just as any home network does, but as the number of clients rises, the requested-data backlog builds up. With WiFox switched on, not only did users experience a better response, but the more users connected, the more data the system was able to keep moving.

Improvements, the scientists say, ranged from 400 per cent with around 25 users to 700 per cent when the network was supporting the maximum number of clients. And the average response time falls by 30-40 per cent.

This is, they say, a major improvement in "goodput" - a wonderfully Orwellian coining if there ever was one.

And the WiFox algorithm can easily be added by vendors’ to their access point firmware, the team’s leader, Arpit Gupta, a PhD student in computer science, said.

Gupta and fellow coders Jeongki Min and Injong Rhee have written their work up in a paper entitled ‘WiFox: Scaling WiFi Performance for Large Audience Environments’ which will be presented at the ACM CoNEXT 2012 conference in Nice, France next month. ®